1. Executive Summary A "Football Imperialism Map" is a visual representation of geographic control based on competitive results. Originating from college sports (American football) and adapted for global soccer, the map divides a region (e.g., Europe or the world) into territories. A team gains a territory by defeating the team that currently holds it—mirroring historical imperial conquest. This report outlines the data requirements, territorial division logic, transfer rules, and visualization strategies necessary to build an accurate and engaging map. 2. Defining the Map’s Scope & Territory Before plotting data, define the geographic and competitive boundaries.
if match_result == "home_win": loser = away_team winner = home_team elif match_result == "away_win": loser = home_team winner = away_team else: return # draw territories_lost = [t for t in territories if t.owner == loser] for t in territories_lost: t.owner = winner t.acquired_date = today An effective imperialism map requires clear visual hierarchy.
1. Executive Summary A "Football Imperialism Map" is a visual representation of geographic control based on competitive results. Originating from college sports (American football) and adapted for global soccer, the map divides a region (e.g., Europe or the world) into territories. A team gains a territory by defeating the team that currently holds it—mirroring historical imperial conquest. This report outlines the data requirements, territorial division logic, transfer rules, and visualization strategies necessary to build an accurate and engaging map. 2. Defining the Map’s Scope & Territory Before plotting data, define the geographic and competitive boundaries.
if match_result == "home_win": loser = away_team winner = home_team elif match_result == "away_win": loser = home_team winner = away_team else: return # draw territories_lost = [t for t in territories if t.owner == loser] for t in territories_lost: t.owner = winner t.acquired_date = today An effective imperialism map requires clear visual hierarchy.
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| Lens Width | Bridge Width | Temple Length | |
|---|---|---|---|
| XS | < 42 mm | < 16 mm | <=128 mm |
| S | 42 mm - 48 mm | 16 mm - 17 mm | 128 mm - 134 mm |
| M | 49 mm - 52 mm | 18 mm - 19 mm | 135 mm - 141 mm |
| L | >52 mm | >19 mm | >= 141 mm |
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Grab a regular card with a magnetic stripe on the back. Student IDs, credit cards and gift cards work well to start our online PD tool.
You may have received our paper PD measurement tool in your recent online order. In order to use this tool, place the ruler on your eyes so that the "0" lines up at the centre in between your eyes. Add up the two numbers, to get your PD. See example below:
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